Black-and-white vertical flyer combining QR code matrix, textual information, and contact details. Upper portion dominated by square QR code blocks arranged symmetrically at top corners and central band, framing a crossed-pencil emblem at midpoint. Immediately below appears contact line “@alexboya” and email “info@alexboya.com” in compact sans-serif font.
Main body of flyer contains descriptive paragraph in serif typeface, centered and fully justified. Text introduces TheMill.World as a multidisciplinary creative initiative encompassing graphic novel, animation series, and collaborative art community. Content emphasizes integration of world-building with participatory storytelling featuring contributions from more than 100 guest artists. Narrative premise described situates project in speculative near-future environment: “Chapter 1 explores a reverse-zombie pandemic caused by an agrochemical company’s synthetic bread turning people into nonviolent walking bread that are chased by the hungry living due to global warming-induced food scarcity.” Final lines describe initiative as social experiment structured in “three-phase immersive journey through sci-fi multiverses.”
Stylistic features emphasize clarity and compact information delivery. Use of black-and-white contrast ensures legibility across varying media reproduction. QR codes function as scannable gateways linking digital audience to extended resources. Overall layout balances technological scannability with textual explanation of creative concept, situating flyer as hybrid between promotional print artifact and digital-access portal.
Image depicts vertically oriented promotional graphic combining QR code blocks, contact information, and descriptive text. Four QR codes are arranged symmetrically in the upper half of composition, occupying left and right corners. Centered between codes is crossed-bread emblem, functioning as minimal iconographic logo. Below logo, contact handle “@alexboya_” and email address “info@alexboya.com
This drawing presents a surreal monument-like structure, blending architectural solidity with organic proliferation. At its core stands a rectangular form resembling a decayed shrine, furnace, or altar, its slats resembling teeth or barred windows. From the top erupts a serpentine, root-like entity with elongated limbs and tendrils, exhaling sprigs of vegetation as if breath itself becomes plant life. Below, curling roots and fluid textures coil around its base, anchoring the structure in an unstable ground.
This drawing reveals a striking juxtaposition between organic chaos and architectural order. On the left, a massive, gnarled tree dominates the composition, its trunk twisting into serpent-like coils that descend into exposed subterranean layers. These roots, sinews, and cavities resemble both geological strata and human viscera, making the underground an ambiguous zone of life and decay. The upper branches, stretching outward with curling tendrils and small leaves, echo gestures of reaching, almost like hands groping toward the sky.
This digital artwork presents a hybrid portrait where a human face has been seamlessly merged with the front view of a turbine engine. The upper half of the head retains realistic hair and ears, while the entire facial area is replaced by the metallic fan blades of an aircraft jet engine, radiating outwards in perfect symmetry. The polished copper and steel tones contrast sharply with the natural textures of human skin and hair, creating a surrealist fusion of biology and mechanical engineering. The image reflects themes of industrial identity, mechanization of the body, and the intersection of human and machine consciousness. The precision of the rendering emphasizes both photorealism and digital illustration techniques, situating the piece at the crossroads of concept art, speculative design, and symbolic portraiture.